Morning Wire - Into the Danger Zone: TOPGUN Instructor Breaks Down the U.S. Strike on Iran
Episode Date: March 7, 2026What does it take to launch a massive airstrike on Iran? We talk to former fighter pilot and TOPGUN instructor David Berke to find out. From 18-hour bomber runs to split-second ejections under fire, B...erke breaks down how America trains elite pilots for combat — and what makes U.S. airpower so dominant. Get the facts first with Morning Wire. - - - Ep. 2669 - - - Wake up with new Morning Wire merch: https://bit.ly/4lIubt3 - - - Today's Sponsors: Vanta - Get started at https://Vanta.com/MORNINGWIRE Zocdoc - Go to https://Zocdoc.com/WIRE to find and instantly book a doctor you love today. - - - Privacy Policy: https://www.dailywire.com/privacy morning wire,morning wire podcast,the morning wire podcast,Georgia Howe,John Bickley,daily wire podcast,podcast,news podcast Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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On February 28,
the U.S. and Israel
mobilized a massive air strike on Iran,
deploying hundreds of planes
from around the region for a highly targeted
daylight ambush.
Those aircraft have created the environment
by which Iran is really
going to have a very difficult time preventing us from operating in their airspace wherever
and however we want. In this episode, we speak to a top gun instructor about what it's like
participating in a mission on this scale and how the U.S. military prepares their world-class pilots
for combat. I'm Georgia Howe with Daily Wire executive editor John Bickley. And this is a weekend
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Joining us now is retired Marine Corps pilot and top gun instructor David Burke.
David, thanks for coming on.
Yeah, it's good to be here.
Thank you.
And just to start off, I'm embarrassed to admit this, but I didn't realize that there were
fighter pilots in the Marines.
How did you go from being in the Marines to a top gun instructor?
Yeah, it's a good question.
And it's something that actually is common that there's a misunderstanding that there are
fighter pilots in the Marine Corps.
Naval aviation in general consists of both Navy and Marine Corps.
pilots, and we work really closely together. So all of foundational initial training that Marines
go through is Navy training. So you might have a class that's 80% Navy, 20% Marines, and we go
through all the same training. And back when I was doing this in the mid to late 90s, when I was
getting my start, we were flying a lot of the same airplanes, much like we do now. And so I ended
up getting selected for the Marine Corps to fly the F-18 Hornet. And it turns out that the Marine
had, you know, well over a dozen F-18 squadrons, and a handful of them would deploy on
Navy aircraft carriers. And I was in a squadron in the Marine Corps. I was attached to a Navy carrier.
So I spent four years as a Marine flying off Navy ships, aircraft carriers in Iraq and Afghanistan.
I went to Top Gun as a student as a Marine, and there's a relatively small percentage of Marines
that get to go. And then I was invited back to be an instructor on a staff of 25 instructor pilots
they have three Marine pilots at the Navy's Weapons School, which we call Top Gun.
So I was very, very lucky as a Marine to have a career that I flew fighters for the Marine Corps,
but very closely connected and integrated with the Navy.
And that took me to Navy carriers.
That took me to Navy Top Gun.
And it took me to be an instructor at Top Gun as a Marine.
Wow.
So I want to ask you, given your background, about what insights you have into Operation Epic Fury,
which is the mission that was just kicked off over the weekend.
What do you know about this mission and what kind of insights can you give us about what went down on Saturday?
Yeah, I mean, this Georgia is a mission of huge magnitude.
The number of sorters, the coordination with both us, our naval and air forces, Israel's air forces as well.
There is a lot going on.
I'm fortunate to join my experience.
I flew combat missions off aircraft carriers launching from the deck of a U.S. carrier,
very similar to how we started this operation in a lot of.
of coordination with a lot of land-based assets. This is an extensive, complex, and comprehensive,
very air-centric attack to start off this campaign. How does this attack compare to some things that
you saw, and how does it fit into the broader context of American military history?
This is a big mission. I don't want to make it sound like this is very small, but things that
we've done in somewhat recent history, 2003 in Iraq, 2001 in Afghanistan, we are accustomed and well-trained
to do exactly what you saw, which is hundreds of aircraft flying nonstop, 24-hour operations,
long missions. We had some flights that are 18, 19 hours originating in the United States.
Those are B-2s from Whiteman flying all the way to Iran and back.
And so while this is pretty significant, this is something we are familiar with,
something we've been training to for a long time, and something that the U.S. military is actually
really good at.
Now, when you say 18 hours, is that one guy in a small plane?
flying for 18 hours?
In this aircraft, we're talking about the B2,
they're going to be a pilot and a co-pilot up in the aircraft,
and oftentimes they'll swap that out,
so you'll have more than one person in that case.
But you have a relatively small crew in a relatively small aircraft
flying for literally over 24 hours,
five or six air refueles to get there.
Sometimes five or six air fuels to get home.
That is a mind-blowing experience that no one in the country in the world
can create that capability other than us in that aircraft.
Now, we're still learning about what happened last week, but one pretty amazing story is the pilots that were shot down in Kuwait that somehow survived. What do we know about that incident?
Yeah, obviously, I think the most dramatic and the most challenging one we've seen so far is the friendly fire incident where we lost three F-15s. And there's video of those aircraft plumbing to the ground. And any time you lose an aircraft in combat, that is a dramatic. It is a significant event. First, I think it's amazing. And we're very thankful.
thankful and I thank God that all six air crew walked away from that and they're okay.
But when you have an incident, a friendly fire incident, I think that is sometimes, unfortunately,
the best revelation of just how complex and how demanding air combat can be and how very,
very small errors can lead to huge catastrophic events when you're talking about aircraft and losing
three of 15s was really an unfortunate thing. Again, I'm really glad they're all okay, but that was a
really, really tough thing to see because I know how often those blue-on-blue incidents,
the potential for that is very high. We avoid them, but not always.
How did those pilots survive that? I mean, just based on their training, what do they do in that
situation? Can you walk us through what that's actually like? Yeah, and I say this,
you know, kind of a double-edged sword on one sense. It's really good. We have unbelievably good
training to prepare aircrew for the advent of having to leave an aircraft, having to eject
out of an aircraft. And that training is excellent. The other side of that is obviously it's something
we don't ever want to have to do. But my estimate would be is when the incident happened and all three
of those aircraft were hit and the aircraft were no longer flyable, their training kicked in.
They did exactly what they were supposed to do. The video was dramatic, not just them parachuting out
of the aircraft, but them being interacting with on the ground with the local Quaidie populace.
And those aircrew, exactly the way they're trained, did exactly what we've all prepared for.
Like I said, it's a double-edged sword, but they executed flawlessly once that thing happened.
So how much time do they have from the time they realize they've been struck to making that decision, I presume, to shoot themselves out of their seats?
I mean, is that seconds?
Yeah, Georgia, that's a great question. And it is seconds.
Obviously, I can't replicate in my mind exactly what that's like.
but to be in a friendly aircraft over essentially in that case, friendly territory, post-mission,
the likelihood in their mind that they were at risk was probably very low.
So I would assume that that thing cascaded out of control in a matter of seconds to the point that they're hit.
The aircraft is no longer flyable.
They're very low to the ground.
And so that's seconds before they're pulling the ejection handle and making the decision to get out of those airplanes.
That must have happened very, very quickly.
Now, sorry, just to get really granular about this, if the pilot pulls the,
ejection thing. Does that eject everyone out of the cabin together? How does that work,
the pilot and the co-pilot together? Yeah, absolutely. When you have a two-seat aircraft like the F-15E,
a pilot and a whizzo, it's very, very likely the mode that they have set as either of the pilot
or the backseat or either the pilot or the whizzo. When they eject, both aircrew exit at the same
time. So what are we up against when it comes to Iran's flight capabilities? Yeah. Listen, I don't
ever want to say that we are in a no-risk environment. War comes with risks. Aviation can be
inherently risky. That said, the Iranians are going to have a really hard time putting up a robust
air defense system. And that doesn't mean that our aircraft are flying with impunity. There's always
risk. Man, portable air defense systems, relatively small, mobile things to shoot, those always exist.
But for the most part, we have done a really good job wiping out at the very beginning.
Iran's radar systems to find and locate us and Iran's weapon system to shoot at us.
So those aircraft have created the environment by which Iran is really going to have a very
difficult time preventing us from operating in their airspace wherever and however we want.
We call that air dominance, air supremacy.
We control the skies.
And again, the risk isn't zero.
It never will be.
But we have a really good handle on the situation right now.
Now, something that military buffs, including my producers, were buzzing about this past
week was the F-14 Tomcat jets that Iran has, which could now be destroyed. First of all, why do they
have those and why are so many people concerned about their destruction? What's the story with the
F-14 Tomcat jets? Yeah, the biggest thing I think you're looking at with the F-14 being flown
by Iran, I hate to say it, it's probably nostalgia. Because the F-14 represented one of the most
iconic aircraft America's ever built. It was showcased in the movie Top Gun. It's a legendary
Navy fighter check. We actually sold F-14s to Iran in the 70s and they used them. They've been able to
preserve literally for the last 40-plus years a handful of flying F-14s. It's very unlikely and at this
point in the war almost impossible for them to be functional. But I think what you're talking about
and why the question is being asked is it's going to be tough for any American fighter pilot to drop a bomb
on an F-14 if they do find one, a silhouette on the ground. And we've done that with other
American-made aircrafts. They have F-5s, F-4 Phantoms. They have a lot of older generation American
fighters that they owned and bought from us in the 70s that we are single-handedly destroying,
and that's going to pull on the heartstrings of naval aviators who hold those planes at high regard.
Now, is this primarily a strike that's being fought by air?
It's a good question. And yeah, for the most part, that is. I think what it's demonstrating
is a couple things. One is the broad range of capability that aircraft can bring,
We can do a lot more than just shoot down enemy aircraft.
And Iran really is not in a position to defend themselves using aircraft to fight against us.
So we have aircraft that can bring weapons to bear that cover the full range of we can take down headquarters buildings.
We can take down early warning radar systems.
We can take down ballistic missile sites.
We can attack targets underground.
What aircraft are able to do and the breadth of the U.S. Air Force, the Marine Corps, and the Navy range of aircraft,
can do almost anything. And so you're seeing a very, very, very heavy air-centric to include our
partner in Israel doing the exact same thing. If shaping the battlefield, all the relevant targets out
there, for the most part, can be hit by aircraft. And that's how we're operating. And it's a really
good way to operate. Now, last question. I have a very small amount of insight into this just through
some of my family lore. My maternal grandfather was a fighter pilot in World War II.
He was actually shot down twice into the Pacific.
And he didn't speak about it for many, many years because it was really traumatic.
But one thing I did glean from talking to family members discussing it is that he said this is basically a job that you can only get young men to do because you'd have to be absolutely crazy to do some of these maneuvers in the air.
And a lot of young men actually died in training, learning to do this.
So how do you teach pilots to overcome what?
must be an insane amount of fear to be able to maintain presence of mind and complete a mission
when you're, say, spinning in the air or under heavy fire. How do you even teach that skill?
Is this something that you can teach or is it something that some individuals just have?
Yeah, well, first, I have to honor the legacy of your grandfather fighting in the Pacific,
and that's a remarkable thing, something you should be proud of. I'm proud to hear that.
And I would never want to correlate my experience in combat and certainly the training
that we go through to somehow being the same as what they endured in the Pacific and World War II.
That was an unbelievable experience.
But I will tell you, his comments are right.
There is a uniqueness to aviation and a uniqueness to the chaos that goes along in fighter aviation in combat.
But it also speaks to the capability of, I think, two things.
One is, we have men and women absolutely willing to do that.
I wouldn't say that they're fearless, but they're absolutely willing to put their fear aside
and put themselves in these incredibly chaotic, dangerous, life-risking environments and do it happily.
It also speaks to the ability that we have learned definitely on the shoulders of men like your grandfather
how to teach and train this.
And listen, I don't want to be arrogant.
I don't want to make it sound like nobody can do this.
This is something many people can do.
But not everyone can do this.
The training program is hard.
It is very dynamic.
There's a lot going on, not just as I'm flying and fighting, but also with the technology
to managing systems in real time.
And so what he described, there's a lot of similarities now.
And we have a blend of these absolutely incredible people willing to risk their lives,
but also incredibly well-trained.
The Navy and the Marine Corps and the Air Force have spent decades learning how to train pilots
to do exactly what they're doing.
And part of the reason why this has been so successful is how well-trained we are.
We have the best equipment, the best training in the world.
And it's built on the legacy of man like your...
grandfather. So we're very lucky to have that in our history. All right. Well, David, thank you so much for
making time for us today. This is a pretty remarkable thing that you and your guys do out there.
I'm absolutely honored to be here. Thank you so much for having me on.
That was Chief Development Officer at Eschlon Front, retired Marine fighter pilot and top gun instructor
David Burke. And this has been a weekend edition of Morning Wire.
